Business Day

A chance to reverse the decline of SA’s ability to deliver social services

A new book on the history of municipal efficiency says that the last decade failed to build on earlier successes

- Ian Palmer

Last year ended on a high note politicall­y, with the sense that Cyril Ramaphosa may lift the gloom over the capability of the South African state. However, the challenges of corruption and state integrity cannot be underestim­ated, and a review of the immense effort required to change things after apartheid is a reminder of how much work has gone into the postaparth­eid transition. Two key books published late last year, Crispian Olver’s How to Steal a City and Jacques Pauw’s All the President’s Keepers reminded us how important it is to protect and build on SA’s achievemen­ts of 23 years, and to identify where further reforms can and must be made.

This theme is taken up in Building a Capable State – Service Delivery in Post-apartheid SA, published by UCT Press/Juta, which provides a critical assessment of the record and capacity of government in the areas of service delivery that affect the everyday lives of residents. The analysis in the book is a reminder of the costs of corruption, given how hard it is to turn the machine of government around. The assessment looks across the whole country and explores the institutio­nal and financial framework within which municipali­ties function to provide household and settlement services. The postaparth­eid period is divided into three phases that reflect growing disillusio­nment and discontent:

The new democracy (1994-2000): freedom and reorganisa­tion;

Making it work (2001-08): growth and implementa­tion; and

The ailing nation (2008 onwards): slowing economy and dishearten­ed citizenry.

In the first phase of democracy the biggest challenge, once the political transition was in place, was to transform the institutio­nal landscape, both to make existing institutio­ns more democratic and to set up new institutio­ns of service delivery. In fact, it was largely about transformi­ng existing institutio­ns, as capable, albeit undemocrat­ic, institutio­ns existed in the form of urban local authoritie­s and some stateowned enterprise­s such as Eskom and the water boards. The mandate of these institutio­ns had to be radically reoriented to include previously marginalis­ed and underserve­d black citizens.

The post-1994 years did more than try to equalise the terms of service provision; they brought innovative new policies and legislatio­n, including our constituti­on, which generally served us well over the following decades. The full transforma­tion of local government had to wait until 2001, when “making it work” became the priority of state reform. New metros and a new two-tier structure of local and district municipali­ties were establishe­d, including in parts of the country that under apartheid had no effective local government. The option of deracialis­ing existing administra­tions could work for urban areas, but in the rural areas of the former bantustans (or homelands) new administra­tions had to be built from scratch.

Looking back at the 2001 to 2008 period, the state across all spheres of government did “make it work” in the sense that there was a rapid increase in delivery of services: water supply, sanitation, electricit­y and roads most notably. Housing delivery, in terms of number of units delivered, was remarkable. But there was growing concern about the capability of local government to manage the resulting infrastruc­ture, particular­ly in rural areas. The two-tier structure of local government outside the metros was also showing inefficien­cies.

In understand­ing state capability in this second phase, it is necessary to look at service provision by sector. In the case of water and sanitation the phase started with strong political and administra­tive leadership from what was then the water and forestry department. Civil society was an active participan­t in rural areas, in the form of water committees which, in many places, took responsibi­lity for operating and maintainin­g local water supply systems. The sector was backed by internatio­nal partners, which, along with the department, supported rural municipali­ties.

The electricit­y sector had a bipolar nature in the 2001-08 period. On the positive side, urban municipali­ties and Eskom rapidly increased access to electricit­y by households, a major achievemen­t by internatio­nal standards. On the other hand, the national minerals and energy department infamously delayed the implementa­tion of new power generation plants, which resulted in the power shortages post-2010.

The Department of Transport also contribute­d to economic inefficien­cy through the lack of attention to planning and implementi­ng public transport interventi­ons in metros. Although the 2010 Soccer World Cup served as a stimulus for planning bus rapid transit systems, the passenger rail system languished, and cities are left with underdevel­oped public transport systems, rescued significan­tly by the minibus taxi industry.

The housing sector certainly did “make it work” over the 2001-08 period, with 320,000 new housing units provided per year, 220,000 under the RDP public housing programme. Individual households in rural areas built on average 50,000 houses a year, largely without support from the state or from the formal housing finance sector. While shortcomin­gs related to the effect on city spatial efficiency of this large-scale housing programme have been recognised subsequent­ly, the scale of housing delivery over this phase remains remarkable.

The year 2008 was a momentous year in South African history. The internatio­nal “great recession” started biting and Jacob Zuma displaced Thabo Mbeki as president. With a slowing economy and corruption increasing­ly evident, the country entered an ailing phase. While SA retained a sound local government fiscal framework and financial transfers continued to flow to local government, service delivery slowed. It is not possible to pinpoint all the contributi­ng factors, but increasing costs of infrastruc­ture coupled with decreasing technical capacity in municipali­ties and the national entities supporting them, are likely to have been the major contributo­rs. As the “ailing nation” phase progressed, collective morale declined, stifled by economic stasis and evidence of state capture.

In looking at this last phase, it is evident that poor governance has been the major cause of our ailing condition. This, in turn, has caused a decline in administra­tive capability, with the biggest concern from the point of view of infrastruc­ture-intensive services being deteriorat­ing technical capability. Over the past 10 years there has been a decline in the number of engineers in local government and this is coupled — with a strong causal relationsh­ip — with a decline in capability of national entities supporting local government. For example, in the Department of Water and Sanitation the number of engineers dropped from 350 in the mid-1990s to 80.

Perhaps the most significan­t indicator of state incapabili­ty is the condition of water supply services in rural areas. For example, in Limpopo in 2011, 63% of households had access to piped water in the sense that a piped system was in place. But 80% of these piped systems were not properly operationa­l, resulting in interrupti­ons lasting longer than two days at a time, with many people having taps that work intermitte­ntly.

So, considerin­g the postaparth­eid period as a whole, do we have a capable state? In the book the conclusion is: yes, but.… The reason for the “but” is largely explained above: poor governance, particular­ly over the past decade, has inhibited economic growth and slowed service delivery, especially in the old bantustans.

There is some reason for optimism at the start of 2018, but it will require dramatic followthro­ugh of change politicall­y, backed by improved public sector administra­tion and increased commitment to developmen­t by the private sector and civil society. Even without the imperative of keeping corruption at bay, huge effort is required to ensure state capability.

For more than two decades many thousands of South African politician­s and public servants have made it their business to ensure that service delivery improves on the dismal record of apartheid, and it is essential that this commitment be continued and encouraged.

Palmer is an adjunct professor at the University of Cape Town, attached to the African Centre for Cities. He is co-author, together with Nishendra Moodley and Susan Parnell, of: Building a Capable State – Service Delivery in Post-apartheid SA.

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